It has undoubtedly revolutionised our lives, but recently, the reputation of science - and its purpose - have been called into question: from worries about genetically modified foods, to fears about the development of biological weapons....
Yet just over two centuries ago, scientists were seen in a very different light -- thinkers across Europe began to put reason at the heart of all debate, and to see experience and experimenatation, not received wisdom, as the key to knowledge. The age was called the Enlightenment: so what was its legacy?
For this week's Big Question, Emma Joseph travels to Paris and looks back more than two hundred years to an age that changed the way we see our world. At the Palace of Versailles, Emma takes part in an experiment herself - re-enacting the flight that sent the first mammals into the air, in the footsteps of the Montgolfier Brothers.
The development of the Sciences as distinct disciplines during the Enlightenment saw the teachings of the Roman Catholic Church undermined by new discoveries. This was what came to be known as the Age of Enlightenment External link
Thursday, May 28, 2009
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment